DWARVES KINGDOM

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Dwarves Kingdom
Matthew Salton, 2015

Catalog No.: FTF-212
Length: 76 minutes

One day, a Lord of the Rings-obsessed Chinese real estate investor met a little person on the train. This downtrodden man’s openness about his trouble finding a job inspired the businessman to try and help: he created an amusement park where people with dwarfism could live and earn money performing. Though the park has attracted negative attention from groups like Little People of America, Dwarves Kingdom attempts to capture what the park means to its workers. The film is by turns moving and discomforting; in intimate interviews, we learn how individual workers’ dwarfism has impacted their relationships and how the park has created a community, empowering some and upsetting others. Then, in long song and dance sequences from the vantage points of the park’s visitors, we’re reminded that these performances are all most people will see. One of the star performers, an aspiring actress named Gao Yan, asks herself whether she prefers her park persona to the roles she plays in the outside world. She journeys from the park to Beijing and Japan, living with former co-workers, singing karaoke, and dreaming of stardom. Her performance is the film’s emotional anchor, making us wonder whether the park’s very existence has - if nothing else - required one person to make a perverse choice. 

Directed and Produced by Matthew Salton
Original Music by Portugal. The Man, Ceiri Torjussen

Festivals: Fantastic Fest, Independent Film Festival of Boston, New Orleans Film Festival

WATCH THE FILM

PRESS

"Part Scrappy, Part Sweet and Wholly Enjoyable."
-The New York Times 

"Raw and Intimate."
-The New Yorker

"A Gem of a Film."
-The Guardian

"Scrappy, Ebullient, Energizing."
-Variety